North Korea's Lazarus Targets macOS Users via ClickFix
Lazarus continues leveraging ClickFix for initial access and data theft: in this case, against Mac-centric organizations and their high-value leaders.
macOS is Apple’s desktop operating system, whose vulnerabilities, security updates, and software ecosystem affect device protection and data security.
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Background for this topic.
macOS is the desktop operating system for Mac computers. Its security model combines signed-code checks and notarization through Gatekeeper, built-in malware detection, application sandboxing, System Integrity Protection, and privacy controls that restrict access to files, cameras, microphones, and other sensitive resources. FileVault can encrypt the startup volume, reducing exposure if a device is lost, although it does not protect data from an attacker using an unlocked account.
For security teams, macOS is an endpoint whose risk depends on timely operating-system and application updates, configuration, and user permissions. Vulnerabilities in macOS components, browsers, or widely deployed software can enable code execution or privilege escalation, while malicious or over-permissioned applications may bypass intended isolation through user-approved access. Organizations should track supported versions, enforce updates and disk encryption through device management, limit administrative access, and preserve relevant logs for investigation; security controls and available telemetry can vary by macOS release and Mac hardware.
Lazarus continues leveraging ClickFix for initial access and data theft: in this case, against Mac-centric organizations and their high-value leaders.
You scroll past one incident and see another that feels familiar, like it should have been fixed years ago, but it still works with small changes. Same bugs. Same mistakes
macOS LOTL techniques bypass detection using native tools and metadata abuse
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